What's Happening

Adrian Dominican Sisters Recognized for Involvement with National Catholic Chaplains

May 11, 2016, Chicago – Three Adrian Dominican Sisters received special attention during the annual conference of the National Association of Catholic Chaplains (NACC), held in Chicago last month. Sister Romona Nowak, OP, was one of seven chaplains to receive advanced certification as an Advance Certified Hospice Palliative Chaplain. Read her story, published earlier on What’s Happening.

Sister Rosemary Abramovich, OP, marked 40 years as a member of the NACC and was formally recognized for her service as president from 1987 to 1989. Now on the Adrian Dominican Congregation’s General Council until July 2016, she has ministered as a Board-certified chaplain for 38 years. She ministered with the retired Adrian Dominican Sisters at the Dominican Life Center in Adrian from 1995 to 2010. Before taking office with the General Council in September 2013, she served as Director of Mission Services for ProMedica, a health-care system that encompasses Northwestern Ohio and Southeastern Michigan.

Sister Cyrilla Zarek, OP, was honored as an “NACC Grandmother” for her pioneering work as a chaplain and her long-time involvement in the organization as one of the first Sisters to join the organization in the 1970s and to become certified.

In a phone interview, Sister Cyrilla said she was surprised and embarrassed by the recognition. She brings a long history of involvement in pastoral ministry and the chaplaincy – as well as early and key involvement in the NACC.

While ministering at Infant Jesus of Prague School in Flossmoor, Illinois – as teacher and assistant principal – Sister Cyrilla took her first plunge into pastoral ministry. She worked on Saturdays as a nurse’s aide at Applewood Manor, a nearby nursing home. “I loved it,” she said. “I trained some of the students in my class to visit the residents.”

It was through this experience that she came to realize that she felt drawn to ministry with the elderly and that she was first invited by Dominican Father George Dougherty to come to Houston to earn her Clinical Pastoral Education (CPE) at Texas Medical Center.

After completing the CPE program in 1973, Sister Cyrilla began ministry in the Department of Pastoral Care and Education at Mercy Hospital in Chicago and ultimately became an adjunct professor at Catholic Theological Union.

“I got into the supervisory field through the back door,” Sister Cyrilla said. One CTU student asked for her supervision, and, by the end of the first year, she was supervising five students in their ministerial practicum. In addition, she was the supervisor for seminarians at Mundelein Seminary in the Archdiocese of Chicago and CPE supervisor for several students, including Adrian Dominican Sisters Rosemary Abramovich, Romona Nowak, and Thomas Leo Monahan.

Sister Cyrilla was also a pioneer at the NACC, both as one of the first women to join the organization and as the first woman to be hired full-time in the national office, originally located in Washington, DC. “I worked there for three years and had two bosses,” she said. When, in 1981, the NACC became a separate organization – no longer under the direct auspices of the U.S. Bishops – Sister Cyrilla helped the organization to move its headquarters to Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Sister Cyrilla also served on the NACC’s original Certification Commission, along with Father Dick Tessmer. “There were no [professionally written] standards when we started out,” she recalled. “We were writing standards and determining what was needed for certification.”

In a reflection written for the NACC’s 40th anniversary in 2005, Sister Cyrilla expressed her gratitude for the opportunity to serve as the organization’s coordinator of education and on the Appeals Panel.

Feature photo: Sister Cyrilla Zarek, OP, at the National Association of Catholic Chaplains conference in Chicago. Photo by Jeanine Annunziato, Courtesy of NACC

Sr. Rosemary was a great NACC President with a most positive spirit! If it wasn't for the Sisters, the NACC would consist of worn-out priests - one per hospital! In fact, if it wasn't for the Sisters there wouldn't even be hospitals in this country! The Sisters were the impetus and they were the doers that made modern health care happen!

Sister Cyrilla might appreciate the fact that one of her students, Father Edd Anthony, OFM, speaks so highly of her so often. Edd and I are close friends and we worship together each Sunday when he celebrates liturgy in his home here in Palm Springs CA. On any number of occasions, he reminds us of the wisdom that Sister Cyrilla shared with him when he worked with her at Mercy Hospital. Please share this with her if you can. Thank you.